Hubble telescope provides fresh look at stunning ‘Sombrero Galaxy’

NASA and the European Space Agency are releasing revisited cosmic features previously images by the Hubble Space Telescope as it approaches 35 years in space. The collaborative mission was launched on April 24, 1990 to help us understand the universe.

As the Hubble Space Telescope approaches 35 years since its launch, marking over three decades of incredible images of the universe and science, NASA and its partner, the European Space Agency, are revisiting some of the spacecraft’s most striking work.

The first installment in the 35th anniversary series is the famous Messier 104 galaxy, also known as the Sombrero Galaxy. This time around, using new processing techniques, the galaxy is revealed in greater detail with more background stars and galaxies. 


The Sombrero Galaxy is about 30 million light-years away within the constellation Virgo. Its most recognizable feature is its Mexican hat-like shape, hence the Sombrero nickname. But this galaxy is no hat hanging on a wall. The sharp line of the brim is created as one solar mass of gas is converted into stars, making the looping, dusty disk. 

According to NASA, the galaxy's central supermassive black hole is 2,000 times more massive than the Milky Way's at nine billion solar masses.   

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NASA's other powerful space telescopes, including the retired Spitzer Space Telescope and its new James Webb Space Telescope in 2024, have studied the Sombrero Galaxy. Each uses different imaging techniques to capture the galactic wonder in a new light. 


NASA and the ESA will continue to release more images this year to celebrate Hubble’s 35th anniversary. The telescope, sometimes called "The People’s Telescope," launched on April 24, 1990. 

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